1,610 research outputs found
On the Gravitational Collapse of a Gas Cloud in Presence of Bulk Viscosity
We analyze the effects induced by the bulk viscosity on the dynamics
associated to the extreme gravitational collapse. Aim of the work is to
investigate whether the presence of viscous corrections to the evolution of a
collapsing gas cloud influence the fragmentation process. To this end we study
the dynamics of a uniform and spherically symmetric cloud with corrections due
to the negative pressure contribution associated to the bulk viscosity
phenomenology. Within the framework of a Newtonian approach (whose range of
validity is outlined), we extend to the viscous case either the Lagrangian,
either the Eulerian motion of the system and we treat the asymptotic evolution
in correspondence to a viscosity coefficient of the form ( being the cloud density and ). We show how,
in the adiabatic-like behavior of the gas (i.e. when the politropic index takes
values ), density contrasts acquire, asymptotically, a
vanishing behavior which prevents the formation of sub-structures. We can
conclude that in the adiabatic-like collapse the top down mechanism of
structures formation is suppressed as soon as enough strong viscous effects are
taken into account. Such a feature is not present in the isothermal-like (i.e.
) collapse because the sub-structures formation is yet present
and outlines the same behavior as in the non-viscous case. We emphasize that in
the adiabatic-like collapse the bulk viscosity is also responsible for the
appearance of a threshold scale beyond which perturbations begin to increase.Comment: 13 pages, no figur
Self-Organized Bottleneck in Energy Relaxation
We study an energy relaxation process after many degrees of freedom are
excited in a Hamiltonian system with a large number of degrees of freedom.
Bottlenecks of relaxation, where relaxations of the excited elements are
drastically slowed down, are discovered. By defining an internal state for the
excited degrees of freedom, it is shown that the drastic slowing down occurs
when the internal state is in a critical state. The relaxation dynamics brings
the internal state into the critical state, and the critical bottleneck of
relaxation is self-organized. Relevance of our result to relaxation phenomena
in condensed matters or large molecules is briefly discussed.Comment: 4pages, 5 figure
Self-consistent models of cuspy triaxial galaxies with dark matter haloes
We have constructed realistic, self-consistent models of triaxial elliptical
galaxies embedded in triaxial dark matter haloes. We examined three different
models for the shape of the dark matter halo: (i) the same axis ratios as the
luminous matter (0.7:0.86:1); (ii) a more prolate shape (0.5:0.66:1); (iii) a
more oblate shape (0.7:0.93:1). The models were obtained by means of the
standard orbital superposition technique introduced by Schwarzschild.
Self-consistent solutions were found in each of the three cases. Chaotic orbits
were found to be important in all of the models,and their presence was shown to
imply a possible slow evolution of the shapes of the haloes. Our results
demonstrate for the first time that triaxial dark matter haloes can co-exist
with triaxial galaxies.Comment: Latex paper based on the AASTEX format, 20 pages, 11 figures, 2
tables. Paper submitted to Ap
Direct Dark Matter Detection with Velocity Distribution in the Eddington approach
Exotic dark matter together with the vacuum energy (associated with the
cosmological constant) seem to dominate the Universe. Thus its direct detection
is central to particle physics and cosmology. Supersymmetry provides a natural
dark matter candidate, the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP). One
essential ingredient in obtaining the direct detection rates is the density and
the velocity distribution of the LSP in our vicinity. In the present paper we
study simultaneously density profiles and velocity distributions in the context
of the Eddington approach. In such an approach, unlike the commonly assumed
Maxwell-Boltzmann (M-B) distribution, the upper bound of the velocity arises
naturally from the potential.Comment: 21 LaTex pages, 27 figure
Cool Customers in the Stellar Graveyard IV: Spitzer Search for Mid-IR excesses Around Five DAs
Hydrogen atmosphere white dwarfs with metal lines, so-called DAZs, require
external accretion of material to explain the presence of weak metal line
absorption in their photospheres. The source of this material is currently
unknown, but could come from the interstellar medium, unseen companions, or
relic planetesimals from asteroid belt or Kuiper belt analogues. Accurate
mid-infrared photometry of these white dwarfs provide additional information to
solve the mystery of this accretion and to look for evidence of planetary
systems that have survived post main sequence evolution. We present {\em
Spitzer} IRAC photometry accurate to 3% for four DAZs and one DA with
circumstellar absorption lines in the UV. We search for excesses due to unseen
companions or circumstellar dust disks. We use {\em Hubble Space Telescope}
NICMOS imaging of these white dwarfs to gauge the level of background
contamination to our targets as well as rule out common proper motion
companions to WD 1620-391. All of our targets show no excesses due to
companions 20 M, ruling out all but very low mass companions to these
white dwarfs at all separations. No excesses due to circumstellar disks are
observed, and we place limits on what types of disks may still be present.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, Accepted to A
Gravitational Collapse and Fragmentation in Molecular Clouds with Adaptive Mesh Refinement
We describe a powerful methodology for numerical solution of 3-D
self-gravitational hydrodynamics problems with extremely high resolution. Our
method utilizes the technique of local adaptive mesh refinement (AMR),
employing multiple grids at multiple levels of resolution. These grids are
automatically and dynamically added and removed as necessary to maintain
adequate resolution. This technology allows for the solution of problems in a
manner that is both more efficient and more versatile than other fixed and
variable resolution methods. The application of AMR to simulate the collapse
and fragmentation of a molecular cloud, a key step in star formation, is
discussed. Such simulations involve many orders of magnitude of variation in
length scale as fragments form. In this paper we briefly describe the
methodology and present an illustrative application for nonisothermal cloud
collapse. We describe the numerical Jeans condition, a criterion for stability
of self-gravitational hydrodynamics problems. We show the first well-resolved
nonisothermal evolutionary sequence beginning with a perturbed dense molecular
cloud core that leads to the formation of a binary system consisting of
protostellar cores surrounded by distinct protostellar disks. The scale of the
disks, of order 100 AU, is consistent with observations of gaseous disks
surrounding single T-Tauri stars and debris disks surrounding systems such as
Pictoris.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures (color postscript). To appear in the proceedings
of Numerical Astrophysics 1998, Tokyo, March 10-13, 199
The Jeans Instability in Presence of Viscous Effects
An analysis of the gravitational instability in presence of dissipative
effects is addressed. In particular, the standard Jeans Mechanism and the
generalization in treating the Universe expansion are both analyzed when bulk
viscosity affects the first-order Newtonian dynamics. As results, the
perturbation evolution is founded to be damped by dissipative processes and the
top-down mechanism of structure fragmentation is suppressed. In such a scheme,
the value of the Jeans Mass remains unchanged also in presence of viscosity.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
Caregiversâ Perception of the IPadâs Utility for Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC): A Conflict between Illusion and Reality
The primary purpose of this study was to compare perceptions of the iPadâs utility for augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). A sample of 15 caregivers, eight of whom cared for individuals who had iPads (âusersâ) and seven of whom cared for individuals who did not have iPads (ânon-usersâ), responded to a survey created by the authors to identify possible helpfulness of the iPadâs for enhancing communication. Non-usersâ perceptions of the potential utility of the iPad were statistically significantly greater than those of the caregivers who had utilized the iPad for AAC. These findings strongly suggest a conflict between the non-usersâ illusions and the usersâ subjective reality regarding the iPadâs potential to improve communication skills
Equation of the field lines of an axisymmetric multipole with a source surface
Optical spectropolarimeters can be used to produce maps of the surface magnetic fields of stars and hence to determine how stellar magnetic fields vary with stellar mass, rotation rate, and evolutionary stage. In particular, we now can map the surface magnetic fields of forming solar-like stars, which are still contracting under gravity and are surrounded by a disk of gas and dust. Their large scale magnetic fields are almost dipolar on some stars, and there is evidence for many higher order multipole field components on other stars. The availability of new data has renewed interest in incorporating multipolar magnetic fields into models of stellar magnetospheres. I describe the basic properties of axial multipoles of arbitrary degree â and derive the equation of the field lines in spherical coordinates. The spherical magnetic field components that describe the global stellar field topology are obtained analytically assuming that currents can be neglected in the region exterior to the star, and interior to some fixed spherical equipotential surface. The field components follow from the solution of Laplaceâs equation for the magnetostatic potential
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